Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Urban Missions
Missions.
Jesus commanded His disciples to "Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age." Matthew 28:19-20. In commemoration of this final instruction from Him before He ascended into heaven, Evangelicals today call this last word the Great Commission. Evidently, this is not a word of advice, or random teaching. Rather, it is, as the name suggests, a "commission", or a charge, a duty that has been laid out. Furthermore, since it is "great" it merits attention, effort, resources and obedience for it to be attended to. As a result of this, churches all over the world, and CHristians who form those churches all consider Evangelism an important responsibility. It is not optional.
However, as a sociological experiment, I invite you to consider what most churches (especially in Singapore) would describe as their Evangelism ministry. More often than not, it involves 3 things. Money, prayer and youths sent out. By this I mean, they consist of budgets to support certain missionaries, sent out or adopted by the church; prayer devoted to support and encourage and strengthen the ministries of these adopted missionaries, and finally, sending out our young people to 3rd world countries to try and reach the lost. In the last case, more often than not, just think about what happpens in these "mission trips". We send our 13-25 year olds to _____(usually Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, China usually) and they teach English, play with kids, paint houses, bring medicine, food, sing songs, put up plays, etc- but it's usually the same set of activities and resources that we're bringing them. Teaching English is the most common one. Of course, the assumption is that when we head for these 3rd world countries, we're talking about a shortage of medicine, food, clothing, and other necessities. When we teach English, we're giving them education, empowering them to pursue employment and perhaps contribute to some other kind of economic solution to their ills. As the proverb goes, "it is better to teach a man to fish than to give a man a fish." These are useful.
But let me ask something. How often have you heard of a missionary going to... Bukit Panjang. Or Orchard Road. It's all nice and dandy to ease our evangelistic conscience by sending missionaries and our young people to foreign countries where English- the language of trade and commerce, as well as food and other necessities are in shortage. But who's going to reach my neighbor? Who's going to take the light of the Gospel and shine it in the hearts of those who are richer than I am, or more privileged, or more educated or more HAPPY? Do we bring these people the gospel because we want them to be affluent and happy and economically well off? OR do we believe that the gospel meets SPIRITUAL needs and all things necessary for joy and meaningful existence? I think that many of our churches today are shortchanging themselves by focussing on these countries. Don't get me wrong. THese ministries are necessary. But we're not working hard enough on reaching our friends, our neighbors or those we consider to be our direct mission field, and I believe that our mindset when it comes to missions is a crippling factor more than anything else.
THe time tested formula of "money, food English and aid" to these impoverished nations has served us well, and is doubtlessly expanding the Kingdom of God. I say Amen and Praise God to that. But let's also think about URBAN MISSIONS. How are we going to reach the people in the cities? When they (sometimes) speak better English than we do, are more intelligent, with more degrees, or more affluent etc, how do we say that Jesus has come to bring you life and life abundant (Jn 10:10)? Do we even have that conviction?
Sadly, (and I know that I might be shooting myself in the foot) I think the evangelical churches fail in this regard. THe churches (and I commend them) for having devised an intelligent and effective way of reaching these cities are the megachurches, whose formulae of street evangelism, using the arts/music/drama, campus ministries, large scale evangelistic events and other means of community penetration have proven deeply powerful. That's why they're MEGA churches.
WHen corporations sell a product, they do incredible amounts of market research. Lately, a BBC show featured a rising industry of market researchers who dig through consumer's trash, study surveillance cameras in supermarkets, ethnovideographers conducting interviews etc just to find out how and why consumers consume. Surveys are done regularly, as are focus groups because the underlying obsession is profit and sales. They want their product to get sold, so they'll do anything to get it packaged the right way, presented the way etc. How about CHristians? I"m not saying we're SELLING Christ, but we need to have a similar attitude- we want the world to know Him, so let's minimize the obstacles in the way!
In conclusion, I think evangelicals need to pull up their socks, and learn from the megachurches. Especially since we believe that our message and teaching is Biblical and truthful, then let's get it out there! Or maybe we don't want our churches to grow. Maybe we want to retain our little family churches, and our doctrinal purity. Maybe we're content with our mediocrity. Regardless, what about the Great COmmission? None of us are absolved from it!
Whether it's music, arts, drama, relevant cultural apologetics, Christian surveys, presentation, cell group organizational strucure, and other tools, we need to reconsider Urban Missions and stop stroking our little evangelical conscience with our paltry contributions to missionaries and youth mission trips. We need to stop being pew warmers and become Urban Missionaries.
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
King Tut Versus 秦始皇
With his lush and opulent trappings, artifacts, embalmings and coffinage, King Tut was all set to face death head on, because, like the Chinese, he aspired to transfer his earthly wealth from one reality to the next. When I was young, I always wondered why people would spend so much time burning paper money for their dead relatives - did they actually believe they were TTing the cash over through the ATMs of hell? And the extravagance of the paper houses, cars, mansions, complete with maids and servants - did people really believe that those translated into some kind of spiritual reality? King Tut clearly did, and he planned to take his wealth and riches with him into eternity, into a kind of immortality through a kind of material preservation. Unfortunately, I didn't go to the exhibition, which I kind of regret- but, hey! It cost 40 bucks!
Now, in 2007, I've been walking past alot of British Museum advertisments, in particular when I pass through the tube station at Borough station on the Northern line, where I live. The current ongoing exhibition, installed till June 2008, features the First Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang, and his legendary terracotta warriors. Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China, ruled from 247-221 B.C. Wikipedia (my ever handy source) has this to say about Qin Shi Huang's mausoleum:
"Qin Shi Huangdi’s necropolis complex was constructed to serve as an imperial compound or palace. It comprises several offices, halls and other structures and is surrounded by a wall with gateway entrances. The remains of the craftsmen working in the tomb may also be found within its confines, as it is believed they were sealed inside alive to keep them from divulging any secrets about its riches or entrance. It was only fitting, therefore, to have this compound protected by the massive terracotta army interred nearby. In July 2007 it was determined, using remote sensing technology, that the mausoleum contains a 90-foot tall building built above the tomb, with four stepped walls, each having nine steps. Researchers theorized it was built "for the soul of the emperor to depart." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terracotta_warriors
Like King Tut, Qin Shi Huang had an obsession fear the afterlife. After all, if you were the lord of a region, with absolute power over all the affairs of your nation, what more did you have to worry about? That kind of life would have just been a daily extravagance of sampling the best cheeses of the day, enjoying the very best of music, arts, literature, theater - the high life! I suppose, your only concern then, would be to prolong this state of enjoyment and pleasure - and immortality would be your next goal. Perhaps then, it is no surprise that Qin Shi Huang had a deep obsession with the cultivation of an elixir that would give him immortality and allow him to be, not only the First Emperor of China, but the last one too. Maybe that's what his stunning mausoleum was, then - a final recognition of his inability to attain immortality, and in a last burst of desperation, trying to retain his political power and wealth by recreating a masterpiece to accompany his soul in death. At some point, I'll have to visit the British Museum and this current exhibition then, exploring Qin Shi Huang's preoccupation with the afterlife. Alternatively, Tan Dun wrote an opera starring Placido Domingo of the same title, "THe First Emperor". Maybe I'll watch that instead. =)
Isn't it amazing, how two incredible rulers from such different cultural backgrounds all reflect the same kind of fixation with concerns of mortality? Egypt and China aren't exactly neighbors. And what about other great rulers and kings who concerned themselves with the state of their soul and death?
And perhaps we're not so different from our ancient predecessors after all?
But what does the Bible say? Mark 8:36 says, "What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world, but loses his soul?" And in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16 19-31):
"There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day. 20At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores 21and longing to eat what fell from the rich man's table. Even the dogs came and licked his sores.
22"The time came when the beggar died and the angels carried him to Abraham's side. The rich man also died and was buried. 23In hell,[a] where he was in torment, he looked up and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. 24So he called to him, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.'
25"But Abraham replied, 'Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony. 26And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us.'
27"He answered, 'Then I beg you, father, send Lazarus to my father's house, 28for I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they will not also come to this place of torment.'
29"Abraham replied, 'They have Moses and the Prophets; let them listen to them.'
30" 'No, father Abraham,' he said, 'but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.'
31"He said to him, 'If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.' "
And today, we have One who has indeed, come back from the dead. Perhaps we should listen to His teaching closer than anyone else's. It really doesn't matter how rich, or how famous you are when you're alive - all that matters is where you're going after you die.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Precious
Jesus describes, in Matthew 13:44, the kingdom of heaven, which is like a man who finds treasure and in his joy, reburies it in a field, and then sells all he has to buy that field again. How have we taken the word of God and turned it into something common and trashy? When was the last time I saw the kingdom of heaven as a precious treasure?
I was just thinking about that today as I walked from Waterloo to Westminster Abbey. Imagine that man's excitement and joy, the Bible says, in selling all his possessions. To him, there must not have been a better setting for getting rid of all his stuff. What did it all count for, his pittance, compared to that glorious treasure he had exchanged it for?
When was the last time I felt that way about being a Christian, a child of God?
How precious is my Jesus to me?
And then after that, at SWOT, we looked at Romans 1, and how all man has sinned, and the extent of our sin. In our study, we learnt that sin, as Romans 1:23 describes it, meant exchanging the glory of the immortal God for the mere images of Man and animals - desiring to BE God, and to lust after the glory and authority and honor due Him. And the reasonable punishment for that, is being given up to our sin, or as the Bible says in Romans, being given up to our own sins by God. C.S. Lewis puts it this way, that there are two kinds of people, those who bow the knee to God and say "Thy will be done" and those who God turns to and says, "then thy will be done". And as James says, being given up to sin gives birth then, to death, and separation from God.
And yet, in Christ, we are spared from that death - how precious!
And it's best described in Isaiah 35:10
"And the ransomed of the LORD will return.
They will enter Zion with singing;
everlasting joy will crown their heads.
Gladness and joy will overtake them,
and sorrow and sighing will flee away."
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Christian Liberty: Part II
Christian Decision Making
A Study in the Book Decision Making by the Book, by Haddon W. Robinson
Jonathan
Bartlett
08/25/2000
Proactive and Reactive Living
Decisions surround us every day. The problem is, we often forget that
we have a choice on how to live our lives. Most people live reactionary
lives. Life happens, and we just do what comes naturally to us. We
don't think about it too much, we just do it. However, as Christians,
we should not live reactively, but proactively. This means that each
situation we are in brings us to a decision. There is more than one
way to react in every situation. Some actions are appropriate, some
aren't. We need to assess each situation we find ourselves in, and
make proactive decisions on how to handle them, based on Christian
decision-making principles. This way, we can live dynamic lives, and
can be used by the Lord for His work. If we just do what comes naturally,
we will be blown around like dust in the wind, going whatever way the
wind takes us. Christ died for us, we must decide at each moment to
follow Him.
Let me give you some example of this proactive/reactive dichotomy.
I work as a webmaster for a company that has a significant
amount of traffic to their website. In my job, I have to carry
a pager. We have an automatic paging system that pages me and a few
other people whenever a machine goes down. Having never carried a pager
before, I tended to forget mine and leave it at work. I had missed
several pages this way, with other co-workers having to pick up the
slack. One time, this happened at two-o'clock in the morning. The
next day, I was embarrassed about what happened. When my co-workers
asked my what happened, I lied about it saying that I just slept
through it. My decision was reactive. I wasn't thinking about what
I was doing, so my first reaction (which was obviously wrong) is
what I did. Had I been proactive, I would have considered my options,
and chosen a better one.
Jesus was always proactive in His ministry. Even when He was angry,
His actions were well thought out and well planned. Consider the time
when Jesus cleared out the temple. Obviously, He was very angry.
However, don't think that Jesus went into the temple, and then after
seeing the merchants, He flew off the handle and went into a rage.
Actually, He had the whole thing planned. If you look in John 2:15,
you see that Jesus made a whip of chords. I could be wrong, but it
seems to me that making a whip was not something one does on impulse.
Instead, I would say that this move was likely planned, and he made
the whip to help Him carry out His purpose.
So, as
you can see, even when Jesus was angry, His actions were planned,
proactive choices.
Componenets of a Decision
Every decision is composed of these things:
Context
The context is the situation surrounding the decision. No decision
is ever made in isolation. Decisions involve previous choices, other
people, and other decisions.
Courses of Action
A decision entails specific courses of action. It is important to
the decision-making process that a good number of alternatives be
sought out, so the best decision can be made. What may look like
a poor alternative at first may later show itself to be the best choice,
so it is best not to rule out too many options too soon
Benefit Analysis
This is the heart of decision-making. This involves taking each
possible alternative, and weighing the pros and cons to make the
best possible decision. This document is mainly concerned with
helping you weigh the pros and cons in a manner consistent with
the Christian life.
Reactive living is what happens when a person does not spend as much
time looking at the courses of action or analysing the benefits as
they need to. Someone who lives proactively will be constantly weighing
each course of action against Christian guidelines
Let's examine my decision at Wolfram. What did I do wrong? First,
I did not explore all of my options. I did not even consider simply
telling the truth and apologizing. If I had, when I weighed my options
I would have realized that telling the truth is the only valid Biblical
way to go. Later I did realize this, and decided to email an apology
both for my actions and for my lie.
Purpose of this Document
The aim of this document is to acquaint you with some of the proper methods
Christians should use when making decisions, whether the decision is a
large, life-changing one, like what career to take, or whether it is one
of the many daily decisions we must make when we live as proactive Christians.
It also should acquaint
you with many common mistakes and misconceptions most Christians have
about decision making. There are many decision-making methods available
that non-Christians use. However, as Christians, our lives are orientated
around loving and serving the Lord, and our decision-making process should
reflect that. Also, as Christians, we also not to fear the
decisions we have to make, but should be confident that the Lord will
both show us the way and give us what we need.
Decision Making and God's Will
One of the main problems in Christianity is that we don't know what
God wants us to do. We wait and wait and let life pass us by. What
are we waiting for? For God to show us what His will is. Instead
of waiting around, we should be seeking out His will. Indeed, there
are times when it is appropriate to wait, but by default we should
seek the Lord and His will, and only wait when specifically asked.
However, do not be fooled into thinking that seeking the Lord's will
is an easy task. On the contrary, it takes lots of prayer, study,
and time. Be patient and perservere. You'll be glad you did.
One of the most common questions any human asks is "why am I here?".
The Christian's life is oriented around serving God, so the Christian
instead asks, "what does God want me to do?" or "what is God's
will for my life?" The problem is that many Christians know the
question, but they have no idea how to find out the answer. This
has a profound effect on decision-making, because when you know
the direction that God wants you to go, it gives you a guideline
to decision-making. For example, Olympic athletes know that they
are going to compete in the Olympics. Knowing that, they make
decisions on eating, daily routines, lifestyle choices, and all
sorts of other decisions based on where they are going. As
Christians, if we know where God is taking us, we can use that
information to help us make decisions in many areas of life.
The Bible has been regarded as the definitive source of faith and
practice for Christians throughout the centuries. Therefore, we
will follow its lead on finding out how God wants us to make
decisions, and what His will is for our lives.
In the Bible, God makes many statements concerning His will.
It is useful to divide these up into general categories, and see how
they apply to us. These categories are:
God's sovereign will
God's moral will
God's will for you
God's Sovereign Will
God makes many statements throughout the Bible that tells us His
general plan. This general plan is often referred to as God's
sovereign will. It is called this because God assures us that
this is what He wants, and He will be make it happen.
Make no mistake - God will be faithful in executing
His plan, and He wants your help. God's plan
includes, among other things
the salvation of every nation
His kingdom being established on Earth
for the whole world to glorify Him
So, when making decisions,
your first question should be, "Is this in line with God's overall
plan for the world?" There are many decisions where this question
doesn't give you any helpful guidance, such as "who should I be
friends with?". However, this affects many others, such as "how
should I act at work?", "what should I do with my free time?", and
"how should I spend my money?". Although this doesn't give you a
specific answer, it gives you a direction to look in.
If you are stuck trying to find God's will, maybe the best way to go
about it is to look at God's overall plan, and see where you
want to help out in (your church leaders will
probably be able to tell you possible avenues in which you can serve
God). Start there. If later you find out that God wants you somewhere
else, then change direction. But if you don't do anything, you
definitely aren't following His plan.
God's Moral Will
So, God's sovereign will tells us the general direction in which we
need to go. How about more specific issues?
What about questions that not only guide our lives in the long run,
but those that affect us day to day? Questions like, what do I
do about my meddlesome boss? How do I handle my children who
are out of control? How do I choose my friends?
As you can see, God gives us a great amount of moral direction in
the bible. This is one of the best sources of council in decision
making. You will find that the most hard decisions of life are
answered clearly within the moral teachings of the Bible. That
doesn't make the decisions easy to make, nor does it guarantee
a good outcome. However, as Christians, we are here to make decisions
according to God's will, not our own gain.
The Bible's answer to moral questions is known as God's moral will.
God's moral will, like His sovereign will, does not change.
However, how it is performed does vary with circumstance. Knowing
how to apply the Bible's moral principle's is a complex subject,
which will be dealt with later. In
order to make Christian decisions effectively, you must be very
familiar with both what the Bible says, and the proper methods to
apply it.
God's Will For You
God's will for you (known in theological circles as His
individual will) is comprised of the specific things that God wants
you to do. God has a specific plan for
you. Please take note, however, that this plan will not violate
either His moral or His sovereign wills. His plan for you is
fully in line with both. So, if you are trying to make a decision,
often times looking at God's sovereign and moral wills will leave
only one option. In such a case, there is no need to find out
what God's will is, you already have!
God's individual will is probably the hardest to decipher. This
is because the Bible offers no help whatsoever! If you read a
verse and apply it as a message to yourself, and that message
wouldn't make sense to anyone else, you are misinterpretting the
Bible.
In the Bible, there are many examples of God showing His
individual will to people, but we shouldn't confuse what God layed
out for them with what God has planned for us. So how do we
know God's individual will for our lives? There are many ways,
but I've found the most effective way is keeping the communication
lines open with God. The more you have meaningful time with God,
the better you can understand His voice. Anyway, any of the
following can show you God's individual will:
Advice of a trusted friend/pastor/family member
Word of knowledge or prophecy
Personal prayer time
Situations
Be careful about looking at situations for God's will. Even though He
sometimes speaks through them, it is the trickiest of all. God doesn't
always take us down the easiest or most obvious route. We are not
supposed to go through every door that opens. Be sure that before
taking any counsel about God's will for your life, that you weed
out those options that violate His moral or His sovereign will.
Christian Freedom
Of course, in all this trying to figure out what God wants for us, we
often forget about the incredible freedom that God gives us. God
gives us freedom in two main ways - forgiveness and choice.
We have freedom in forgiveness because we know that even if we make
the wrong choice, God will forgive us and we can move on. This is
one of the most exciting things about the gospel for the apostle
Paul. Before Jesus, we had to busy ourselves poring over scripture
after scripture making sure that whatever we did was exactly in line
with what God's commands are. In fact, so much effort was put into
worrying about not doing anything wrong that hardly anything was
done right! In Jesus, we can leave our worrying behind. If we focus
on Jesus and try to do what's right, we don't have to worry if we
miss the mark, because we have complete forgiveness. It doesn't mean
that we should ignore God's words and commands, but we don't need
to live in fear of breaking them. Instead, we can concentrate on
glorifying the Lord, and accomplishing His perfect plan.
However, that is only one kind of freedom God gives us. God also gives
us a great deal of choice. God cares about what we
want! Within the bounds of His sovereign, moral, and individual wills,
He gives us a tremendous amount of freedom to operate. In 1 Corinthians
7:39, Paul says to the widows that they can marry
anyone they want (as long as that person is a believer)! In one
of life's biggest decisions, marriage, God gives us freedom to choose
within His boundaries. God's moral will prevents us from marrying
non-believers, but other than that, the instructions are to marry
(or don't marry) whomever we wish. Now, God does choose wives
for some, and for others there may be a best
choice of a wife. However, for the general case, the choice is
entirely up to you! Now, in the case where God gives no direction
as to His individual will, and His sovereign and moral wills leave
several options open, you should employ good decision-making skills.
God has left the choice to you, so you should choose wisely. Although
there is no "wrong" decision in these cases, some have more desirable
consequences than others. When the choice is yours, be sure to make a
good decision!
A Strong Sense of If
When making any plans, whether you believe them to be according to
God's will or part of the free choice that God gives us, we must
always remember what James says - God may change our plans at any
moment. James 4:13-15 explains that it is stupid to say tomorrow
we will do something, instead we should say that
if the Lord allows it, we will do whatever it is we were planning.
There is nothing wrong with planning, but always remember that even
the most definite of outcomes can be changed by God. He may move in
any situation to our benefit or detriment. As James says, we should
not say "tomorrow we will do thus and such," but instead, "if the Lord
wills, tomorrow we will do thus and such." It's not a matter of words
- anyone can incorporate this into their language - but whether or not
you acknowledge that God has control of the situation, not you. God
has a full understanding of what's going on, but you don't. In
1 Corinthians 13:0 Paul says that we currently only know and prophesy
in part (later we will know the whole picture). In the Old Testament,
Joseph had the vision that his brothers would bow before Him. However,
even with this knowledge straight from God, He did not know that He
would spend decades in bondage before that. If He was expecting God to
follow his own way, Joseph would probably have forsaken God a long time
before God could fulfill His promises.
Resources for Decision Making
The Bible
The Bible is the obvious first place for a Cristian to look
for God's will. However, it is very easy to misuse what God
says, and thus render it ineffective. If you do not properly
interpret the Bible, you can read anything into it that you
want to, and therefore, it is no more helpful than your own
opinion. If you just want your own opinion, there is no reason
to consult the Bible for it.
You can spend your life learning Bible-study methods. You may
wonder - how many do I need to know until I'm ready to study?
Well, you will never know everything about biblical interpretation,
and you'll never know everything about the Bible. However, you
should always try to learn more of both, and they will each help
the other. As you learn better interpretation, it may cause you
to re-examine previous scriptures, and come to a new understanding.
Your old beliefs may have been based on a faulty reading of scripture -
be prepared for that. Also, be willing to be corrected by those who
are better at interpretation than you are, but you should also examine
what they have to say for yourself to make sure it makes sense
(many heretics are also bible scholars). Don't be afraid to ask others
when you face difficulties, you may learn something new.
This paper does not intend to give even a thorough introduction to
Biblical interpretation. If you are new to Biblical interpretation,
you should read the book How to Read the Bible for All its
Worth. It is definitely worth it.
Examining the Context
The Bible has many, many verses. You might not know this hearing
some people quote it. Before even attempting to interpret a
passage of scripture, you need to understand the context it is
placed in. The context consists of two parts
The historical context
The scriptural context
The historical context consists of things like historical background and
cultural customs. Take for instance Simon. He was called "the zealot".
Just reading that, you may think that it means that he was very
enthusiastic. However, knowing the history of that time, you find that
the there was a group of people who called themselves "the zealots",
who were militant in wanting Jerusalem out of Roman control. It is
not certain that Simon was a part of this group, but knowing that
he might be will help understand his actions as portrayed in the
Bible. The Bible was first written to the people of its time. Paul
wrote his letters to his churches, not to us. Therefore, it is
important not to ask, "what does this mean to me and my situation", but
instead ask "what did this mean to them and their situation?" Only
after that question is answered can you then extract a meaning for
your situation today. For example, Paul once said "greet one another
with a kiss". If he were to have said that to our churches today, then
we should all be going around kissing each other all the time. But he
didn't. He wrote it to a Greek church where kissing is a common greeting.
A proper interpretation for today's world is "greet each other with
a warm hug or handshake." Now, this does not give us license to
declare parts of the Bible not applicable to today because of the context.
You should never say "that doesn't apply to us". The only revelant
question is "how does that apply to us". Sometimes it will apply
differently in our culture than it did then. However, to find that out,
you must first discover how it applied to their culture.
The scriptural context basically says where this passage fits in
with the rest of the Bible. It consists of
How long is this passage?
How does this passage relate to the rest of the book?
How does this passage relate to the rest of the Bible?
Now, I can't possible tell you everything you need to know about these
questions, except alert you to their presence and necessity, and give
you a few examples of what to do. First of all, lets take the length
of a passage. When looking at a passage, you need to decide how long
of a section constitues the main idea. For example, when studying
the Good Samaritan story, you can't just read the story, you also have
to read the verses before it. If you were just to read the story, you
might not understand what it's about. However, if you look a few verses
before, you find out that the whole story is an answer to the question,
"Who is my neighbor?" Many people have read that and come up with
some really strange interpretations. However, the meaning is clear if
you read it with the question "who is my neighbor" in mind. Now, there
is no cut and clear way to determine what the absolute length of a
passage is. However, when you read verses, be sure to look both before
and after the given verse until you come to what seems to you like a
section break. Find out the main point of the section, and then
read the meaning of a verse based on the main point of the section.
Next, you need to look at that passage in the context of the whole
book. This isn't something you can do easily - you must have a good
background on the purpose of the books of the Bible as well as the
style in which they were written. You can find this information from
a good study bible or commentary. The book How to Read
the Bible for All it's Worth has a good reference to much
of this information. Basically, you have to ask yourself:
Why was this book written?
To whome was this book written?
What style was this book written in?
How does this passage fit in with the book as a whole?
The first two questions can give you a background for reading the book.
Knowing why something is written can give you
a better knowledge of what it is about. However,
the question that affects interpretation the most is the style question.
The Bible was written like everything else is written. It was written
for a reason, and in a specific style. When I write poetry, I write
differently than when I write prose. I use different words. When I'm
arguing, I might exaggerate to make a point (note that exaggerate is
not lying - its purpose is to clarify your point by making it bigger).
Each type of writing makes its point in different ways. In the Bible,
if you are reading poetry, don't use the words of a poem as an exact,
literal truth. They are not even meant that way. When reading a
parable, don't look for any deeper truth than what answers the
question Jesus was being asked or discussing. When reading a
narrative, don't assume that the main character does everything right -
its just an account of what happened, not necessarily what should
have happened. The Bible was written in a number of different styles,
and it is important to interpretation to both know what the style was,
and also how that style affects the meaning.
Finally, you need to read the passage in relation to the whole Bible.
Basically, ask yourself, "how is this part of God's message to
humanity?" If you can't find the answer, re-examine the verse, look
at more resources, and ask others.
Examining the text
Whenever reading the Bible, it is always a good idea to check several
translations to make sure you have an accurate reading. I think it
is good to always include the King James version. Why? It's not
because I think it is more holy or anything. Rather, there are many
words in the Bible whose translation is uncertain. In most modern
translations, the translators almost always make a guess as to what
it means. The King James, on the other hand, usually leaves it
vague and uncertain. People complain about the King James being
difficult to understand, but that is often because the meaning of
the original Greek or Hebrew is unclear. Anyway, by reading several
versions, you get a better idea of what the passage really means.
Why do translations differ?
Many people wonder why translations differ so much from each other.
There are two main reasons - textual criticism and translation style.
Textual criticism is simply the examining of the various copies of the
Bible and determining which copy contains the most accurate rendering.
There are thousands of ancient manuscripts for each book in the Bible,
but we have no original versions. On top of that, each manuscript is
different (usually not by much, though). So, many translations differ
in which set of manuscripts they base their translation on (the process
of determining this is way outside the scope of
this study). Also, there are differnt styles of translation. The
literal style basically takes each word in the original language, and
finds a matching word in English. This usually renders a very dry
translation, and it requires the reader to know many greek idioms.
Interpreting the Text
After learning about and studying the text, you are ready to interpret.
There are actually two parts to interpretation:
Finding out what the passage meant then
Discovering how it applies today
You might wonder how these two things differ. Shouldn't the Bible mean
the same thing yesterday, today, and forever? Yes, of course. However,
people change. Culture changes. Therefore, the means of living the
Christian life today is different from the past. Some things are
explicitly meant to be true forever, but others vary according to
culture. However, you should say that a verse doesn't apply to today.
All scripture applies, but it may apply differently today than before.
For example, I follow Paul's recommendation of greeting each other
with a holy kiss by greeting others with a warm handshake. I am
carrying out the idea presented in the verse according to the culture
at hand.
The Bible and decision making
These tools I've presented for Bible study should enable you to
more accurately study the Bible, and therefore make better
decisions. If you have God's word in your heart, you are well
on your way to good decision-making. However, if you misinterpret
the Bible, you may accidentally break God's will. That is why
learning biblical interpretation is so important. However, don't
let the fear of misunderstanding or accidental misinterpretation
prevent you from acting on God's word. Do your best. If you are
wrong, allow yourself to be corrected, and let Jesus' forgiveness
do its thing. We don't have to get it all right before we go out
and live it. We just need to go, and if we screw up along the way
we'll be forgiven.
Remember, the Bible will help you out with learning God's sovereign
will and His moral will. Thus, it will give you guidelines on what
are acceptable courses of action in a given situation. However,
it does not offer any specific guidance (unless it rules out all choices
but one). The following are improper uses of the Bible:
You should not use the Bible as a Ouiji board. Don't make decisions
based on a coincidence in a Bible reading. That is a misuse. For
example, if you are trying to decide which college to go to, and you
read a passage about Moses travelling East, do not take
that as an instruction for you to go to an eastern school.
That is a misuse of the Bible.
You should not take any statement as overly literal, overly exact,
or overly encompassing. Remember that the Bible is written in
regular language, which is often inexact. A writer may say "all"
when they mean "all the things I've been talking about". Be aware
that in regular language, things can be vague. Things can be
exaggerated. Noone is being false, they are just using language -
and imperfect tool.
If you use the Bible properly, it will be a valuable tool for decision
making
Prayer
Prayer is one of the best and most underused tools Christians have
at their disposal. God has given us an amazing power through prayer,
yet only very few people make good use of it. I'm sure its possible
to pray too much, but I've never seen it happen.
Christian Liberty: Part I
discernment in Christian liberty
expedience - will it be to my spiritual advantage?
edification - will it build me up?
excess - will it slow me down in the race?
enslavement - will it bring me to bondage?
equivocation - will it be covering for my sin?
encroachment - will it go against what i understand to be the lordship of Christ?
example - will it set a helpful pattern for others to follow?
evangelism - will it lead others to Christ?
emulation - will it be like Christ?
exaltation - will it glorify God?
- john macarthur, thinking through grey areas
Near Future
1.) What does the Bible say about women and their role in the church? In other words, is the Bible sexist?
2.) What does the Bible say about itself? How can we know the Bible is true?
3.) Christian liberty
4.) How can I know God's will for my life.
5.) The Bible and aesthetics
6.) The Apostle Paul
Friday, October 12, 2007
On Hell
We don't like to talk about Hell.
Hell usually is an uncomfortable idea for most people, because it usually leads them to start thinking about how unfair and unjust God is for sending all these people to damnation. After all, the Bible's description of this place for non-believers is highly controversial, and charged with a vindictive air of violence and barbarism. Lake of fire? Eternal torment? Weeping and gnashing of teeth?
Popular imagination and pictures of Hell
Alot of our contemporary understandings of Hell come from popular cultural sources. This is a fact. Whether it's Dante's Inferno, or the 18 levels of Hell from Chinese cultural sources, hell is often associated with a place of torment and intense physical pain and agony. Is this true? I'm suggesting that this is little more than our own imposition of non-Biblical ideas of hell on the text, and making God out to be this incredible tormentor of the human soul, an unkind tyrant who delights in the suffering of others. This of course, is untrue. God clearly states, "The Lord is...not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. (2 Peter 3:9)" INdicating that He doesn't want ANYONE to suffer. Nonetheless, hell is a reality for those who reject the free gift of God's grace through Jesus. But maybe our picture of Hell isn't an accurate one.
Hell as a place of spiritual suffering
The Bible teaches us that Hell is a place where souls end up. In the book, Case for Faith, under claim #6 (my source for this argument), the suggestion is made that hell is a place of spiritual suffering, marked by eternal separation from God, and this is the ultimate torment.
If you think about James 1:17a "Every good gift and every perfect gift comes down from above, from the Father of lights," our God is a God of delight and pleasure, from whom all of life's delights stream from. This doesn't mean that our GOd is a God who's concerned with all pleasures, moral and immoral, but John Piper, in his book "Desiring God" suggests that Christians should be Christian Hedonists because our God is the GOd of ultimate pleasure- Himself.
Logically speaking, if God is the embodiment of all truth, blessing, power, pleasure, glory, beauty and delight, then He is the greatest treasure of all. A life knowing then, that you missed out on that greatest pleasure/treasure for all eternity because you missed Jesus, is one marked by immense regret. For a person who plays the stock market, knowing that you sold your stock too early and missed out on the windfall, you feel an immense sense of loss and regret knowing what you missed out on. This is the same with God.
Remember also, that the Bible makes it clear that one day, the truth will come to light, and all heaven and hell, angels and demons and all of mankind will have to confess Jesus as Lord, because His authority and divinity will be made plain for allthe world to see. Until that day comes, we're kind of living in a state where we're dependent on faith. We know that Jesus is Lord, but by faith we make that claim. ON that day, when we've been sorted into hell-bound and those not, all willl know, and that day will be the day of the greatest spiritual suffering because you know you missed out. Your brokenness will be made plain, and the sense of regret will overwhelm and frustrate for all eternity. Is there any kind of worse suffering?
Conversely, I believe that heaven is only beautiful because of Jesus. Are the streets paved with gold? Is there gold in heaven? Where spirits and souls live, how can there by a physical item like gold? And why would it be precious? The gold, then, is a symbol for something else, something precious and valuable. Something like that precious relationship formed with Him, makes Heaven a place of endless delight and pleasure. In other words, heaven would only be heaven for those who love Him- the more you love Him, the greater your 'reward'. If you didn't love Him, heaven wouldn't be heaven for you. But because you know what you missed out on, hell becomes a place of eternal regret and spiritual torment.
Bible quotes on Hell (underlines and caps from website)
I was trying to do a little search on what the Bible says about hell, and where- and I came across this website
Matthew 25:41 (Jesus speaking to people at final judgment), ...Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels.
Just as how gold doesn't exist in heaven, fire won't hurt a spiritual form. It just doesn't make sense. In the Case for Faith, the expert suggests that the impossibility of a "eternal fire" (since all combustion is depndent on oxygen and physical matter) is a metaphor for something else. Fire is associated with judgment, and GOd's righteous wrath against sin for the individual who isn't clothed with the righteousness of Christ.
Revelation 14:11, And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night...
(sorry I don't know how to get rid of the underline) "No rest day or night" is another way of saying eternal suffering, with no relief or vindication for suffering. THis plays into the idea of a eternal truth being revealed (i.e. Jesus is Lord!) and the sense of eternal regret goes on forever.
Revelation 20:12, 15, And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of life...And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.
As Strobel's expert (I forget who,) suggests, the "lake" of "fire" is primarily, an oxymoron. A lake is a body of water, and fire is a source of physical combustion. It's clearly a metaphor for a large expanse, or plain of judgement- i.e. associated with fire and heat. To the unbeliever whose sin is not cleansed by Christ, the wrath of God is imminent.
Matthew 10:28, And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.
This verse suggests that God has the power to destroy the physical and the spiritual. If GOd is omnipotent, He is surely able to do both. Physical destruction is easy- death and decomposition. Spiritual destruction is also synonymous with spiritual death and separation from God. THe Bible uses this phrase quite often to suggest someone who is cut off from the LIFE, hope and sustenance found in Jesus. Does this verse mean that in hell, a person is annihilated (wiped out of existence)? This is impossible, since elsewhere, the Bible suggests that the souls of man will last through eternity- both in spiritual life and death. They'll be around for a long time. Just in spiritual separation.
Luke 12:5, But I will forewarn you whom ye shall fear: Fear him, which AFTER he hath killed hath power to cast into hell; yea, I say unto you, Fear him.
This verse demonstrates that hell is a place to be feared, even more than causing physical death. Yes, the spiritual consequences of a Christless eternity should be feared more than death itself.
Matthew 18:8, 9 Wherefore if thy hand or thy foot offend thee, cut them off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or feet to be cast into everlasting fire. And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life with one eye, rather than having two eyes to be cast into hell's fire.
This verse tells us that self-mutilation and extreme measures are better than the consequence of going to hell. Nothing could be worse than hell, Jesus says! See other verses on fire as a metaphor for judgment (above). Literal fire probably doesn't exist on a spiritual level.
Matthew 25:46, And these shall go away into EVERLASTING punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
This verse teaches us about the eternal implications of our decisions. There is no end to pain of regret and missed opportunity. Not even time will heal these wounds.
II Thessalonians 1:9 Who shall be punished with EVERLASTING destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power.
This explains the notion of the naked sinner unable to withstand the holiness of God's presence. Those not clothed in the righteousness of the Lamb will suffer eternal destruction aka eternal separation from Jesus, the source of Life eternal.
Isaiah 66:24, And they shall go forth, and look upon the carcasses of the men that have transgressed against me: for their worm shall not die, neither shall their fire be quenched; and they shall be abhorring unto all flesh.
Mark 9:44 (speaking of hell), Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.
The "worm" here could suggest the inner sense of regret and suffering that stems from that inner boring into the soul. The "fire" unquenchable could equally suggest a picture of God's wrath which will never be appeased.
Jude 7, Sodom and Gomorrha...are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire.
Clearly, Sodom and Gomorrah are classic examples of God's wrath and judgment. Their time on earth was marked by physical punishment. But how much worse the spiritual judgment. Likewise, eternal fire or righteous judgment awaits those who don't know Christ.Matthew 22:13, ...Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
As suggested in the Case for Faith- weeping symbolizes sorrow and sadness, mourning for self. Gnashing of teeth is synonymous with intense regret and embitterment.
Matthew 13:41-42, The Son of man (Jesus) shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity; and shall cast them into a furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth.
Fire-judgment. Weeping and gnashing of teeth (see above)
Revelation 21:8, But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death.
A very intensively descriptive verse. Nonetheless, appearing in Revelations, a book of prophecy and metaphorical language typical of prophecy books (like Daniel and Ezekiel). This verse suggests that hell is a place of punishment for the unbelieving, and the heat of the judgment- not physical heat, but the scathing pain and spiritual anguish implied. Furthermore, the text makes it clear- this is a second death. A separation that mirrors the first- this time, not just cut off from the land of the living, but cut off eternally from Life itself.
Psalm 9:17, The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.
Yes, hell is a place for those who disregard God and His righteous standards. These then, are wicked in their stubbornness not to acknowledge Christ, and His atonement.
Isaiah 14:99-11, 15 (referring to Lucifer), Hell from beneath is moved for thee to meet thee at thy coming: it stirreth up the dead for thee...all they shall speak and say unto thee, Art thou also become weak as we? art thou become like unto us? Thy pomp is brought down to the grave, and the noise of thy viols: the worm is spread under thee, and the worms cover thee...thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit.
Again, the language of the "worm" a synonym for regret, remorse, and an internal eating away of the soul, a gnawing at the core of our hearts. Surely there are no worms in hell?
Daniel 12:2, And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and EVERLASTING contempt.
This makes it very clear.
The following is a true story as told by the Lord Jesus in Luke 16:19-31:
19. There was a certain rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day:20. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, full of sores,
21. And desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man's table: moreover the dogs came and licked his sores.
22. And it came to pass, that the beggar died, and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom: the rich man also died, and was buried;
23. And in hell he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.
24. And he cried and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue; for I am tormented in this flame.
25. But Abraham said, Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things, and likewise Lazarus evil things: but now he is comforted, and thou art tormented.
26. And beside all this, between us and you there is a great gulf fixed: so that they which would pass from hence to you cannot; neither can they pass to us, that would come from thence.
27. Then he said, I pray thee therefore, father, that thou wouldest send him to my father's house:
28. For I have five brethren; that he may testify unto them, lest they also come into this place of torment.
29. Abraham saith unto him, They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them.
30. And he said, Nay, father Abraham: but if one went unto them from the dead, they will repent.
31. And he said unto him, If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead.
This verse talks about "a place of torment" and associates it with "fire" which can be cooled by a "drop of water". THis possibly suggests the repeated image of judgment and spiritual pain from God's righteous wrath and anger against the kind of relief that water represents. Life-giving sustenance, cooling and refreshing, and of course, associated with the idea of Jesus being the Water from which if you drink, you will never thirst again.
Conclusion
I don't know if you find the argument convincing, but I am persuaded that God is not an unfair God, neither is He a GOd who delights in our suffering. But let's not confuse OUR ideas of hell with what we think Hell really IS. Let's put our faith in Him, and not put Him on trial, even though He is our judge. But what a joy to have a righteous judge who rewards and punishes according to His perfect justice!
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
The Three Atheists
Source: http://fish.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/06/10/the-three-atheists/
June 10, 2007, 7:16 pm
The Three Atheists
Writings against God and religion have been around as long as God and religion have been around. But every so often an epidemic of the genre breaks out and a spate of such writings achieves the status of notoriety (which is what their authors had been aiming for). This has now happened to three books published in the last three years: Sam Harris’s “The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and The Future of Reason” (2004, 2005), Richard Dawkins’s “The God Delusion” (2006) and Christopher Hitchens’s “God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything” (2007). (Were this the kind of analysis performed in Lancelot Andrewes’s sermons, I would note the fact that the names of all three authors end in “s,” signifying, no doubt, the presence of Sin and Satan.)
The books differ in tone and emphasis.
Harris is sounding a warning against the threat of Islam and inveighing against what he regards as the false hope of religious moderation. “We are at war with Islam,” he announces, and he decides that, given the nature of the enemy — religious zealots informed by an absolute and terrifying faith — torture “in certain circumstances would seem to be not only permissible but necessary.” (This from someone who denounces religion because it is used as a rationalization for inhumane deeds!)
Dawkins doesn’t single out Islam for particular negative intention; in his eyes all religions are equally bad and equally absurd; and he wonders why obviously intelligent men and women can’t see through the nonsense, especially given that so many of the questions religion can’t answer have clearly been answered by the theory of natural selection.
Hitchens, the wittiest and most literate of the three, is a world traveler and will often recount the devastating arguments against religion he has made while lunching with a very important person in Belgrade, Bombay, Belfast, Beirut, the Vatican, North Korea and Washington, D.C., among other places.
Still, as distinct as the personalities and styles of the three are, they share a set of core arguments. (And they toss little bouquets to one another along the way.)
First, religion is man-made: its sacred texts, rather than being the word of God, are the “manufactured” words of fallible men.
Moreover (and this is the second shared point), these words have been cobbled together from miscellaneous sources, all of which are far removed in time from the events they purport to describe.
Third, it is in the name of these corrupt, garbled and contradictory texts, that men (and occasionally women) have been moved to do terrible things.
Fourth (and this is the big one), the commission of these horrible acts – “trafficking in humans…ethnic cleansing… slavery… indiscriminate massacre” (Hitchens) – is justified not by arguments, reasons or evidence, but by something called faith, which is scornfully dismissed by all three: “Faith is what credulity becomes when it finally achieves escape velocity from the constraints of terrestrial discourse – constraints like reasonableness., internal coherence, civility and candor” ( Harris). “Faith is an evil precisely because it requires no justification and brooks no argument” (Dawkins). “If one must have faith in order to believe something,…then the likelihood of that something having any truth or value is considerably diminished” (Hitchens).
It’s time for an example of the kind of thinking Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens find so contemptible. At the beginning of Bunyans’s “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” the hero, named simply Christian, becomes aware of a great burden on his back (it is Original Sin) and is desperate to rid himself of it. Distraught , he consults one named Evangelist who tells him to flee “the wrath to come.”
Flee where, he asks.
Pointing in the direction of a vast expanse, Evangelist says, Do you see the Wicket Gate out there?
No, replies Christian.
Do you see a shining light?
Christian is not sure (“I think I do”), but at Evangelist’s urging he begins to run in the direction of the light he cannot quite make out. Then comes the chilling part: “Now he had not run far from his own door, but his Wife and Children perceiving it, began to cry after him to return, but the man put his fingers in his ears and ran on, crying Life! Life! Eternal Life.”
So what we have here is a man abandoning his responsibilities and resisting the entreaties of those who love and depend on him, and all for something of whose existence he is not even sure. And, even worse, he does this in the absence of reason, argument or evidence. (Mark Twain’s Huck Finn said of “The Pilgrim’s Progress”: “About a man who left his family; it didn’t say why.”) At this point, Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens would exclaim, See what these nuts do at the behest of religion – child abandonment justified by nothing more substantial than some crazy inner impulse; remember Abraham was going to kill his son because he thought the blood-thirsty god he had invented wanted him to.
I have imagined this criticism coming from outside the narrative, but in fact it is right there on the inside, in the cries of Christian’s wife and children, in the reactions of his friends (“they thought that some frenzy distemper had gotten into his head”), and in the analysis they give of his irrational actions: he, they conclude, is one of those who “are wiser in their own eyes than seven men that can render a Reason.” What this shows is that the objections Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens make to religious thinking are themselves part of religious thinking; rather than being swept under the rug of a seamless discourse, they are the very motor of that discourse, impelling the conflicted questioning of theologians and poets (not to mention the Jesus who cried, “My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?” and every verse of the Book of Job).
Dawkins asks why Adam and Eve (and all their descendants) were punished so harshly, given that their “sin” – eating an apple after having been told not to – “seems mild enough to merit a mere reprimand.” (We might now call this the Scooter Libby defense.) This is a good question, but it is one that has been asked and answered many times, not by atheists and scoffers, but by believers trying to work though the dilemmas presented by their faith. An answer often given is that it is important that the forbidden act be a trivial one; for were it an act that was on its face either moral or immoral, committing it or declining to commit it would follow from the powers of judgment men naturally have. It is because there is no reason, in nature, either to eat the apple or to refrain from eating it, that the prohibition can serve as a test of faith; otherwise, as John Webster explained (“The Examination of Academies,” 1654), faith would rest “upon the rotten basis of humane authority.”
Hitchens asks, “Why, if God is the creator of all things, were we supposed to ‘praise’ him incessantly for doing what comes naturally?” The usual answer (again given by theologians and religious poets) is, what else could we do in the face of his omnipotence and omnipresence? God is the epitome of the rich relative who has everything; thanks and gratitude are the only coin we can tender.
Or can we? The poet George Herbert reasons (and that is the word) that if it is only by the infusion of grace that we do anything admirable, praising God is an action for which we cannot take credit; for even that act is His. “Who hath praise enough?”, he asks, but then immediately (in the same line) corrects himself: “Nay, who hath any?” (“Providence”) Even something so minimal as praising God becomes a sin if it is done pridefully . Where does that leave us, Herbert implicitly asks, a question more severe and daunting than any posed by the three atheists.
Harris wonders why the Holocaust didn’t “lead most Jews to doubt the existence of an omnipotent and benevolent God?” Behind this question is another one: where does evil come from, and if God is all-powerful and has created everything, doesn’t it come from Him? Again there is a standard answer (which does not mean that it is a satisfying one): evil proceeds from the will of a creature who was created just and upright, but who corrupted himself by an act of disobedience that forever infects his actions and the actions of his descendants. It is what Milton’s God calls “man’s polluting sin” (“Paradise Lost,” X, 631) that produces generations of evil, including the generation of the Holocaust, for, as Milton’s Adam himself acknowledges, “from me what can proceed, / But all corrupt, both mind and will deprav’d?” (825).
But, Harris , Dawkins and Hitchens object, if God is so powerful, why didn’t he just step in and prevent evil before it occurred? Not judge slavery, but nip it in the bud; not cure a blind man, but cure blindness; not send his only begotten son to redeem a sinful mankind, but create a mankind that could not sin? And besides, if God had really wanted man to refrain from evil acts and thoughts, like the act and thought of disobedience, then, says Hitchens, “he should have taken more care to invent a different species.”
But if he had done that, if Adam and Eve were faithful because they were programmed to be so, then the act of obedience (had they performed it) would not in any sense have been theirs. For what they do or don’t do to be meaningful, it must be free: “Freely they stood who stood and fell who fell / Not free, what proof could they have given sincere/ Of true allegiance?” (“Paradise Lost,” III, 102-104).
I have drawn these arguments out of my small store of theological knowledge not because they are conclusive (although they may be to some), but because they are there – in the very texts and traditions Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens dismiss as naive, simpleminded and ignorant. Suppose, says Hitchens, you were a religious believer; you would then be persuaded that a benign and all-powerful creator supervises everything, and that “if you obey the rules and commandments that he has lovingly prescribed, you will qualify for an eternity of bliss and repose.”
I know of no religious framework that offers such a complacent picture of the life of faith, a life that is always presented as a minefield of the difficulties, obstacles and temptations that must be negotiated by a limited creature in his or her efforts to become aligned (and allied) with the Infinite. St Paul’s lament can stand in for many: “The good that I would, I do not; but the evil which I would not, I do…. Who shall deliver me?” (Romans, 7: 19,24). The anguish of this question and the incredibly nuanced and elegant writings of those who have tried to answer it are what the three atheists miss; and it is by missing so much that they are able to produce such a jolly debunking of a way of thinking they do not begin to understand.
But I have not yet considered their prime objection to religious faith: that it leaves argument, reason and evidence in the dust, and proceeds directly to the commission of wholly unjustified (and often horrific) acts. It is that issue that I will take up in the next column.